Margaret Green Draper Explained

Margaret Green Draper
Birth Date:May 3, 1727
Birth Place:Boston, Massachusetts
Death Place:London
Occupation:Printer

Margaret Green Draper (May 3, 1727 –) was an American printer and journalist. She was the great-granddaughter of pioneering American printer Samuel Green. She was one of the first American women to run an independent business.[1] A United Empire Loyalist, she supported the British monarchy during the American Revolutionary War.

Biography

Draper was born on May 3, 1727. On May 30, 1750, she married her cousin Richard Draper. They had no children, but adopted one of Margaret’s nieces.[2] [3] Richard died on June 6, 1774, and Margaret took over the Loyalist paper The Massachusetts Gazette and The Boston News-Letter. Six of her competitors were driven out of business during her tenure at the paper.[4] Following the Siege of Boston, Draper and other Loyalists left for Halifax, Nova Scotia, on March 17, 1776 (Evacuation Day). She then went to England where she successfully petitioned the British government for a pension.[5]

She died in London, .[2] [6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Encyclopedia of Women in American Politics. 1999. Oryx Press. Phoenix, Ariz.. 9781573561310. Jeffrey D. Schultz . 59.
  2. Book: Ritchie, Donald A.. American Journalists: Getting the Story. 1997. Oxford University Press. New York. 9780195099072. 26–29.
  3. Web site: The Woman Newspaper Publisher who was a Loyalist. Colonial American Digressions. October 31, 2011.
  4. Web site: Women with a Deadline: The Revolution in Print. National Women's History Museum. 3 June 2012.
  5. Book: The Drapers in America: being a history and genealogy of those of that name and connection. 1892. J. Polhemus Printing Company. Thomas Waln-Morgan Draper. 195.
  6. Book: Genealogies of Connecticut families: From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register. 2006. Clearfield. Baltimore. 9780806310305. 94.